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Tea Jar

ClassificationsDECORATIVE ARTS
Dateca. 1800
Mediumporcelain
Dimensions5 1/4 × 3 × 3 in. (13.3 × 7.6 × 7.6 cm.)
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gail-Oxford Collection
Label TextServing and drinking tea at home became enormously popular in America after the middle of the 18th century. Like the tea, itself, many of the implements, dishes, and pots, used were imported from China or influenced by forms brought to America through trade with the East.

Tea tables first appeared in household inventories in Boston in 1706. Relatively small, they were finished on all four sides so they could be placed in the center of a room and easily moved when not in use. With its graceful cabriole legs and elegantly elongated slipper feet, this piece is typical of tea tables produced in Newport in the mid-18th century.

Status
On view
Object number2017.5.5.3
Temple Jar
Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
1736-1795
Object number: 27.115
Blue Hawthorne Ginger Jar
Unknown, Chinese
1662-1721
Object number: 13.23
Temple Jar
Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
1735-1795
Object number: 27.125
Tea Cup
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5.5
Tea Cup
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5.6
Chinese Export Porcelain Tea Service
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5
Tea Cup
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5.7
Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
1736-1795
Object number: 11.42
Mandarin Jar
Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
1736-1795
Object number: 11.43
Punch Bowl in the Imari Style
Unknown, Chinese, 18th Century
1720-1730
Object number: 2017.5.68
Teapot
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5.1
Covered Bowl
Unknown, Chinese
ca. 1800
Object number: 2017.5.5.4